Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power — Fexingo History

The Samurai Who Defied the Shogun: Tokugawa Yoshimune and the Kyōhō Reforms

7 min · 5 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Samurai Who Defied the Shogun: Tokugawa Yoshimune and the Kyōhō Reforms

Descripción

When Tokugawa Yoshimune became shōgun in 1716, the Tokugawa bakufu was in deep trouble — bankrupt, corruption-ridden, and facing a samurai class that had forgotten how to fight. Yoshimune, a daimyo from Kii domain, shook the system to its core. He slashed samurai stipends, encouraged Confucian frugality, and even broke centuries of precedent by inviting commoners to petition the shōgun directly via the meyasubako — a complaint box outside Edo Castle. But his most radical move was the Kyōhō Reforms, a sweeping attempt to restore the bakufu's finances by squeezing the very merchants and samurai who held the real power. This episode explores how Yoshimune's blend of warrior austerity and pragmatic innovation saved the Tokugawa regime — and planted the seeds of its eventual collapse. From the Gokyōnin (his personal spies) to the disastrous Kyōhō famine, we trace the man who tried to turn back time in a world already hurtling toward modernity. #TokugawaYoshimune #KyōhōReforms #EdoPeriod #TokugawaBakufu #Shōgun #Meyasubako #Samurai #Daimyo #KiiDomain #Gokyōnin #KyōhōFamine #Bushido #Confucianism #FexingoHistory #JapanHistory #EastAsianHistory #History #TokugawaJapan Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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